Welcome to the Lung Health Foundation’s Insight Hub — Canada’s trusted source for evidence-based blueprints for improving lung health. Here, we publish reports that shine a light on what’s working, where gaps remain, and what needs to change.
Whether you’re a policymaker, healthcare professional, researcher, or someone living with a lung condition, this hub is here to help you stay informed — and maybe even inspired to advocate.
2026
Reports
Advancing Lung Cancer Outcomes in Ontario
Baseline System Performance and Priorities for 2035

THE CHALLENGE:
Gaps in the lung cancer system are notoriously difficult to monitor. Could a unified lung cancer performance framework help reduce the fragmentation?
THE INSIGHTS:
We identified three key pillars for a successful approach to improving vaccine uptake: sustained and predictable funding, equitable access for all Canadians, and public education optimized for awareness, trust, and engagement.
WHY YOU SHOULD READ IT:
Inside this report, we highlight clinical and administrative data that will unlock actionable insights for health system leaders, clinicians, and policymakers.
RELEASE DATE:
July 2026Acknowledgments
The development of this report was made possible through the expertise and commitment of the working group members. Their insights ensured that the report reflects both clinical and system-level realities, while maintaining a focus on patient-centered care and equity.
Working Group Co-Chairs
Working Group Members
Report Prepared By
Further Reading
- 2026-2035 Pan-Canadian Lung Cancer Action Plan Canadian Cancer Society et al
- Meet Margo. Margo is at Risk of Lung Cancer Lung Health Foundation
Canadian COPD Performance Index
A Provincial and Territorial Variation Report on COPD Care

THE CHALLENGE:
Canada ranks a disappointing 17th out of the 45 countries evaluated in the Global COPD Index. Despite access to universal health care, Canadians with COPD still suffer from high COPD-related hospitalizations and low access to respiratory specialists and care referral pathways. Gaps persist from region to region.
THE INSIGHTS:
Although the Global COPD Index provides information on how Canada fares relative to other countries, it doesn’t provide a clear overview of differences across Canadian regions. This report highlights key challenges, opportunities, and recommendations relevant to strengthening COPD care and improving outcomes across Canada’s thirteen unique provinces and territories.
WHY YOU SHOULD READ IT:
Inside this report, we provide clear, evidence-informed summaries to guide decision-making at the policy and system levels.
RELEASE DATE:
August 2026Acknowledgments
The Canadian COPD Performance Index was developed in partnership with Speak Up for COPD. An interprofessional team of 10 clinicians, data scientists and researchers were included in our working group, alongside a Canadian living with COPD.
Working Group Co-Chairs
Working Group Members
Report Prepared By
Report Reviewed By
Further Reading
- Opinion: Why we still don’t have a National Lung Health Strategy Lung Health Foundation
- The Canadian COPD Performance Index: Spotlight on Alberta
- The Canadian COPD Performance Index: Spotlight on New Brunswick
- The Canadian COPD Performance Index: Spotlight on Ontario
Protecting Lung Health Through Vaccination
A Guidance and Policy Paper

THE CHALLENGE:
Adult vaccination is a powerful tool for protecting public health, particularly for those living with chronic respiratory diseases like asthma and COPD. Despite this, vaccine uptake is suffering — even in the populations who need protection the most.
THE INSIGHTS:
This report provides a baseline assessment of Ontario’s lung cancer system performance and identifies priority areas for action to support progress toward the 2035 national targets in the Pan-Canadian Lung Cancer Action Plan (LCAP).This report provides a baseline assessment of Ontario’s lung cancer system performance and identifies priority areas for action to support progress toward the 2035 national targets in the Pan-Canadian Lung Cancer Action Plan (LCAP).
WHY YOU SHOULD READ IT:
Inside this report, we have translated the National Advisory Committee on Immunization’s guidelines into clear advice for Canadians living with chronic lung disease. We’ve also outlined clear, actionable policy solutions that could increase vaccine uptake for all.
RELEASE DATE:
September 2026Acknowledgments
The Canadian COPD Performance Index was developed in partnership with Speak Up for COPD. An interprofessional team of 10 clinicians, data scientists and researchers were included in our working group, alongside a Canadian living with COPD.
Report Prepared By
Report Reviewed By
Further Reading
- Make Vaccination Part of Your Care Plan – LHF’s Immunization HQ Lung Health Foundation
- Opinion | Understanding evidence-based medicine matters for healthy communities Lung Health Foundation
- Canada needs a robust vaccine registry, not just a Band-Aid solution Lung Health Foundation
Our Process
Working Groups
Most Insight Hub reports are made possible by interprofessional working groups made up of clinicians, researchers, health system leaders, and individuals with lived experience. This collaboration helps ensure that our reports reflect both clinical and system-level realities.
Landscape Reports
Landscape reports are created to help translate existing, external recommendations into actionable guidance. For example, our 2026 Immunization Policy and Guidance Paper will help readers understand recommendations from the National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI), which are fundamentally rooted in a structured consensus process.
A Structured Consensus Process
When Insight Hub reports are created through Working Groups, we choose what we measure (and how!) through a structured consensus process. This helps balance different perspectives (policy, clinical, lived experience) so that no single viewpoint dominates the findings. The process also allows the group to identify and clearly signal what matters most by rating the importance of each item. This is important because it helps people understand not just what the findings are, but which ones matter most and why — making the results easier to trust, use, and act on.
Quintuple Aim
When evaluating the healthcare system, Insight Hub reports use the Quintuple Aim, a widely adopted healthcare improvement framework that looks at five important domains:
Population health
“Are outcomes improving, worsening, or staying the same over time?”
Population health
“Are outcomes improving, worsening, or staying the same over time?”
Patient experience
Cost and efficiency
Equity and access
Provider experience
Support our work
Strong evidence drives better decisions, stronger advocacy, and healthier communities. Your support helps the Lung Health Foundation continue developing and sharing trusted insights, research, and recommendations that inform policy, improve care, and advance lung health across Canada. Make a donation today and help turn knowledge into meaningful change.
